let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

Love Begins
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Monterey Bay Aquarium
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

Origami Around

PR's Tumblrdome

JVL

Kiana Khansmith
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Janaina Medeiros
macklin celebrini has autism
almost home

JBB: An Artblog!

Andulka
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tannertan36
hello vonnie
Peter Solarz
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@loserish-like
'Die Nacht'. Willy Kriegel. 1943.
Visibility - Thomas Sarrantonio , 2019.
American , b. 1954 -
Oil on linen , 42 x 42 in.
Ajak Dhieu by Marcelo Junior Dino for Schon Magazine May 2026
The Face, June 1994.
Ph. Jean Baptiste Mondino
Raspberries - Jos van Riswick
Dutch, b. 1971 -
Oil on panel , 12 x 9 cm.
Adrian Arleo ✺ Ceramic — hand-encrusted form
Cormorant fishing in Yangshuo near Guilin, Guangxi, China. Christian Vaisse
Cormorant fishing is an old tradition in which fishermen use trained cormorants to catch fish.
nemu mu rayu: sleeping cocoon
LAURYN HILL, rolling stone #806 (february ‘99) photographs by mark seliger
The Queen of Sheba
Bilqis and the hoopoe (King Solomon's messenger). Iran, Qazvin Style miniature, ca. 1595, tinted drawing on paper [details]
Qazvin Style was developed during the Safavid dynasty (1501–1736). A Sufi religious order, that established Islam in Persia and thus founding rulers of modern Iran (Shiites: leadership should remain within Muhammad's bloodline)
The Queen of Sheba, Bilqis in Arabic and Makeda in Ethiopian, is a figure first mentioned in the Hebrew Bible, Book of Deuteronomy, Second Book of Kings [scholars trace all or most of Deuteronomistic history to the Babylonian captivity, 6th c. BC]
The original story has undergone extensive elaborations in Judaism, Ethiopian Christianity, and Islam (in that order)
Modern historians and archaeologists place Sheba in one of the South Arabian kingdoms (pre-Islamic states in modern-day Yemen)
"In a massive desire to quench her thirst for knowledge, this legendary queen supposedly paid a visit to Israel's wise King Solomon in Jerusalem (an encounter found in all texts, Hebrew, Ethiopian and Arab). Written accounts suggest that she bore the king a son, Menelik, who would become the first Ethiopian king in the Solomonic dynasty"
The most extensive version of the legend appears in the Kebra Nagast (Glory of the Kings), the Ethiopian national saga, translated from Arabic in 1322. Here Menelik I is the child of Solomon and Makeda (the Ethiopic name for the queen of Sheba; she is the child of the man who destroys the legendary snake-king Arwe) from whom the Ethiopian dynasty claims descent to the present day
In the 19th century, explorers I. Halevi and Glaser found in the Arabian Desert the ruins of the huge city of Marib. Among the inscriptions found, scientists read the name of four South Arabian states: Minea, Hadramawt, Qataban, and Sawa, confirming the residence of the kings of Sheba was the city of Marib (modern Yemen, South of the Arabian Peninsula. Assyrian documents of the 8th-7th c. BC, mention Arabian Queens in the far northern regions of Arabia.
In the 1950s Wendell Philips excavated the temple of the goddess Balqis at Marib (capital city of Marib Governorate, Yemen)
In 2005, American archaeologists discovered in Sana'a the ruins of a temple near the palace of the biblical Queen of Sheba in Marib (north of Sana'a). According to the American researcher Madeleine Phillips, they found columns, numerous drawings and objects dating back three millennia
Yemen (green) - Territory queen probably came from and Ethiopia (red) - The country where her son may have ruled
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Queen_of_Sheba
The Annunciation (1898) by Henry Ossawa Tanner. Philadelphia Museum of Art.
Korina Longin for The Face Magazine (1998) Photography: Peter Robathan
Charm at Down Time - Sheila Anderson-Hardy
Scottish , b. 1956 -
Sumi-e ink and oil on canvas, 105 x 105 cm.
Ripple Effect - Antonia Tyz Peeples
American , b. 1957 -
Oil on linen , 30 x 40 in.
PCES - fw26